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Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1861-10-10

Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1861-10-10 page 1

.--.it Tl it. in a wily IliP - - - - . - VOLUME XXV COLUMBUS. OHIO. TIIXRSDAY MORIS IN G. OCTOBER 10, 1861. NUMBER 04. - .,T I UQteU, ncfauranf. BANFOBD8 LIVER INV1 G0RAT0 R COMPOUNDED KNTIRHLV MtOJI ,, and ba. -m. r ---.--. . in Ui.u knnM and ar med It. and ia now rwortedl lb. dleeaeea I"' which it Ilka cured tbcueende bo had glvea op all bopH anecllcltea eertincai. The doee mint be adapted Miciritial ukln it, and . a.ntlv UU the DUW' Let the dicte. cf your MoftheilPr'-iiira onHPLAlNW. IMtfKVC-lA, CHHOhlCi nMPL!n. vthtrt-filOMAVU, BABITVAL i'BVlUM, CBOLEBA F A S T U M , FI.TV-FKfALB WBABNBt-, rfnlly ae n fIRI'INA-i tINS. ItwIlleuierjJC'B' ends testify) fa tieeatirt .j.i,'f ai ooia- Rf IT n A Tl B 1 1 J a r, 11 'J K O O j z oe w 1j to with conMeac ta alt Httia thelMt two yean of relief, aa the Bananas m, poaseanoa .how. to the temperament of tne need t aock a,uaatlttaau . ... 1 ' ...... OJUrt, and " cn MLLIVl'B .AJ.var-, DUBBUOBA, BVMMKB rear, pbopbt, sees odsr rEiie&e.MOLW, MOHBVB.VHOIEBA IN-LUNCH, J AOS mot, EH. and may be used int. uriDAine. (aa tho.- meuoemaot of attack. GlVlaU Unu weio. TB WITH TUP, INFJfl. ::m. id ahhllo boi rorni. Filet OMPllw pet BattU. ALSO ' ANronir- RinilD PURIFYING PILLS. ..i.aentl'nM'afin tTHtlM rK TrirtABI V IXIBAVTH. AND PVTVP1 The a ' ' IV- I hot wttve Whim', 0d tn hie pnM.lltni"le Th roniianllytniri--whi h- long mA tie len btib all Mpreee In diid mo tu s than Th l'iufeel"0 etl tbeitive tn dlflc.Hit The FAMILY Cl-eilth due tefeteuia lu tllo coipanndwf ftom a rtrm-itia.te,UKh a'.t allte inti caoal. aad eie ANQJtMKIIla of lh r Wis, l-MI-'l 1! THJfi- THI Vt HOIK BUUT, fiwuefll'i H neglected, F ATPE- t'ftsiTtoa ' coli) PMTLKSfMWi!, HtAD-T U UlCAl!, lt IB- . u 1 ufiKMll In . P. A D t " I " 1 f.UEOMATf,UI, a ieal not many dlaMW" IiIlL!' omeutloB lu V'" ""'"fi Vuj-T..b inn FAUILTVA ,hUta V- the TtadMlle ftfaniifactutei and Fi?prletj)l , illttf etoaaway, new TBiBl flltU a gen-whlob aproprletor hu the aa yeara. lug iwmaod Oom inoee VlhM, and he eatiflac rettard to their nee, hae la-within the reach of alt. now that dlfforentCat-(H-ittoiie of the bowel. TilABTIO P 1 1 L baa, wll ejrtablhhed fvf, " ly of the ptireet Vegetable on etety pa't of the all; GOOD and 6Ar In neMe, aw.h ae DB-3TOMA.OH, 8LIBPI-BACK AHP LOIN8, AMD eOBUNEBa OVEB from indden cold, ethlob end In a long eooraeof Fa-TITI. A CBBBP1HO OVICB TH BODY, ACHfS, or WFIUHT IB FLAMMATOBY II8. mn.UHIttf or APULIA, PUBIFllCliof the BLOOD fleeh it heir, too nnnieiont tlewoent. BOBB.Itoa. IMM.k. t.rocerlea. WM..H iRESTIEHUX. : (Koocuaoa to al. Kr.a A Butiiapi) -IIKALCB 1M No. 10G South High Si., Colurabne. GROCERIES; raoDuce. psoripwm t-ORUIUN & DOMESTIC I'Ul'ITS, TLOl'B, BALT, L1QUOB8, IO. - Storage and Oommiasion. - v Amrr ST. NICHOLAS HU1LL, Broadway, New; York. Board Reduced -lo $100 per Day. Pmtheow'nlug of thli rait ud commodloui Hotl, 1a.thb.h.-ng...n ..rd co.rtop.7ra.. .i4 to combln. all the alenjenl. K toSrtSli d clal enjoyment i..antwf and modern taate approved; aod the patruaaga .hTt t'h commanded dntliig lha put .ix ''. """i? " " ...7. .nor i. have been ari'tclated. 35.' wwi. m'donud lave Reduced (he 1'rice of Board to TWO DOLLARS PER DAY, .1 the ..me time abating none of the Untitle. iltU which ,h,lr table be. hitherto been ffl-amo A CO. ' " New Yo.k.B.pt.'AUol. . vyU-ilm REMOVAL. IUf l BLMOfEU rtuut No. 108 Suutb Huh BUt ...... K.re.t .bo. Third. Phll.delj.ltl UPTONS. MEWCOMER, rroprulor. eTThi. Holel 1. central, coneenlent by Tawnier dum to all fart, of the . Ity. and In every "" " it. c6mtm t and want, of tU. M-"- TO THEIRINEW STORE ROOM, BOSTON . n,..i'i, rii 'I'll IN HOTKL BK- J. INO completed, wllh .uperlor a:commcrf.tioM for lidta and Oentlemen, w..,pened, on Monday. Feb. 8 The Hoaee IIW'" rr-w... -nr.h. the JOHN V. M1LLU. "oiTaSSr-' No.ia4 South UikIi etroot; he Intentlo. of lb. Fioprlelor. to nm k. 1 1 wor thy t .t,on. of the traveling fuUtio. H. BoulheABl oumer o( High ud Chapel streels l9tf tjue CAPITAL RESTAURANT, V"VitNrTRR OIK (DALE HUU8E.1 TBR otiderilgned h.. taken the room, onder th OoodX tfon.e. whew will bt fcnnd, Ih.afte id op In good .tyiee, me e.n.o. : - : " Kou. but the beet Ale.. Liquor, and Cigar., ke t COX.TJ3S-IBTJS. TELEGAPHIC NEWS. IIYIPORTANTSOUTHERN NEWS CAPTUKE OF MEW ORLEANS! Proclamation of Gov. Moore of Louisiana! Thlittan Huudiad Indian W.nUra k-u 11 out a for nicCullocli'a Army. Hoiillle Tiealmciit of 1'rdeiaJ I'llNOlltlUHt nichmoud. MliUT KEitt UATTER1S lLLT! iUO or 300 Rplfl SleMigli.ervtl! DULL RUN OUT RUN. at v.. ate, Bj'd w.d O. DuBlg nejv medical discovery, ' Uur lira .petdy and jistmanent ewe of Oonotihea'tileel, Urothal DUohatgeB, Cctuinal Weaknmg, Nightly EmiBBionB, luqou-. (iuente, Ueuiul hiilabilily, ,' Giayel, iitriotuit, kud, AlItJoUB ur THE KlItMIIS AI'D SLADDEB, Ulcb ha. been need ty opKarSi of- IltSDUKD PHIIieiA"; with entite mcceip, .uperedjng iwX.ux'; h,,i,Mi0 knowu. eerred totde. at the Bar. ..-.,.. from Ibe Bar .bort, the Proprietor Intend, to keep a Em !.,.,, t W.J. McFEBLI. rorMdtr In stTTlouis hotel. CHESTNUT STREET. ABOVE THIRD, In the Immediate neighborhood of the Jobbing Hontaa on Market, Third, and Oheetnot BtreeU, the Bank., Po.t Ofnte. Merchant. ' ' nanife. c., HUABU PEtt UKt, wi.ohi. Aceommodatlou when ...l,l nn the EUROPEAN PLAN: Boom, from 60 cent, and upward., per day, end Meal, at a FUJI uiaje ui.,,,.,,t attached to the Hotel. Price, avoiding to Tb'city'toiVtak. Paueugei. fiom any Btatlou TO or CLOSB. TO th. Hotel. aj-Kugllh, French, German and Bpaniih ipoken. lylYdom-VBP DledHlue. ROBERTS & SAMUEL, Wholesale and Retail DHtiaaisTs, to MI T II ' S FAGHIONABUJ No.;oJ South High Stieel. DEALER IN Xi A 'i O , O A X' S i : .', AND MILITARY flOODS. Ihe latrat tlyle. of .. ; A. T O yVXVTXJ OAPB , . Alnayicn hand. Alio, parllclar attention paid to order, fcr HAT, CAPS, AND ORNAMENTS. ...i, i ik. M.,k.l nh ih. Lateet and Mew eet Btylea J. H. SMITH foluinbue, Angii.t jb, 1861 dut Good Nan-, from llaltc. n. Inlet t'he k'.ile-my I.Met.nd Defeated with Ore. t Lio.a. Fort Monrok, Oct. 8. Tho frigate Susque-liauua has arrived Irutu llaUcrai Inlet, aud brings uiost interoiiliug iululligcuce. Tho day aftor the capture of tlio n iicllir Fauuy by the IVIicls, the Coras, aud I'uluaui, liaviug ouo of Ihe launches of tho !juaitiehaiina ia tow with seven days jirovisioua, returuiug the same eve-Ding without having seen : anything of U RebeU. Un Friday, however, word reached llalleraa Inlet by the "latais aud ulripes'' lhat l',500 Kit, ... ...savin action, clteueflw avi -oi Uueitt u.uetr the .loma-.l., or inMiregn. . .f, i h.ir . I...!, luteifcra with bu.lu pur.ult..- i ,lCa' h bo i'jntaln. "it JoJen pill.. I 1' HICK ONE L-OLLAB, KnA llll eet.t by 1UI1 poet pato oy any "S" l. . ,.. mmiRV H-jUl DV UlllKKl.t. b"mi'j. n. . .i.....ii, ,ithe wrauosr. WOU,geBU.nT...u. -"8-(;,ALiH A C0.V Vhuleaals Agents, Olucinuatl. r,.r bv II. WIHoii, 8. E. Samuel. A Co., aud Bob-art. A UiuuoU, Columbiu. "'i '"8' iV"'J V - 1 lry Jooil). 91 Sf.jth IllKh Street, (Kaat Bide,) K AltV t!SHH H' II.C..I ' " laigeauSiiien.iooMi oicia oi DttfinH; ' . Mfcl'i''" UHKMICAL'J, riiHia.oti". VABHISHkS, , pic Kiturfs,' WLM1JOW PtjaiBS, rgBFUWEBf. FANCY B0AF8, ToILST ABT1CLB8, Ac, o. We alio kfte on hand an awortnieut of line Hgat, rnre l.l.in,,. for MtJICHl iiuruoacai wilh eory aiticle unnaiiy i . ,.. r l.u 1 1 .-.I u Hinrn. Baviug bnni. arrangwueui. nu ,rijiuB -'- and manulnr.tnt-r., we ar. prepared to oner gotte lu trade, or at retaL, at tinnauaiiy low puce.. t&Goodi llivcred lo fliijf pari o the cily fret K. (. RIclKAikEN, . SUlltT MANUFACTU Kliilv, No. 1 West Fourth Street, OPl'OHITB BTEErLB WITH GOLD HAND. aprndlr ' ELEGANT FALL SHAWLS. tTairKI CA.SilMF.IIE BBAWLC, . 5 W Me Bor.lftoa Stella Shawls. bl.lioid Chetk Fall bliawla. l.rtau Pl.iil Wwi Bliwl'. Pl.inl Raw bilk Shawl.. Mie"' I'1-W and Clmk Fall BhawU. 11. In MerlnoTjhawla. Siiawl Alerlaua, lloidei., Ac. BAIN & SON, No. 29 South High Street, eei'':l If.- atkh rniinr cliiakb, (Jore Trail H'VI' rklil., Ah'tauilie'. KM Ulcve. JiII-wb' .ml Oihlien'. Full IL'i'iy, LailbT ami 0nfa Fall Hoeiciy, I'li l-i (liiriiH UI. ol .11 kinds, Ml.litlnv klMUIlt 1.1. nil Citllcoe. and peL.i.M, jii.l oi eued BAIN t SON, ' No. 2!) South ilish Street. of charge. ROHRRTH A BAMUBL. DAVIDSON & BRO., (onccoi. to OKC. tl. t'U.01,) mi.iiiin KAIST CVHNKH Fir JU ABU wiin cm., 1 1 PIC IMS ATI, O., ' mroBTiae Atiii dh.u.j tl PUBK I'HWB BND MKIiHUNKH, 1UBMIOALS, BtlAt'it, linuouio, TATENT MFiPIClNKU, FAttur ABlll'LAr), PURR WINKS AND M11IJOU3 for Medicinal o.e COAL OIL, lWItNlNfl FLUID, PAINTS, OILS, VARN18HKH, Ac, Ao. All favoring m with a vlU or their onlr will flud onr tock complete aud prlnw moderate. apr lT-deo!ltaw TOE THB PKIf'l: Consuciplton, Asthoa rioN ano cobk or Chronio Bronohitis, Ner vous Prostration, teneral Debilliy, Dyspep sia, Borofula, MtraBmiiB, Loss of Ap-jistitc, Neuralfia, Female Com-plaiuta, aud til Disorders of ' the Nerviitis and Blood ByeiemB. Ihm Remedy has obleinnt a gtfal reputation for most K X T H A OH D I N A K If t H(S IN ALL BTAOF.8 Ok CDNllUAlinON. It l recanmenneu o .u.uj Phf allien, in Ibo Uuil'd Sll'B and ill Knlope liaviug rV-e-- CHtAPEST Hlol llli'4t IM II VHI.K nooriNQ IN USfc. rrxii'if win ir-ui (ol B(')U -f lh For Hi ll M!tiH, RAIL ROAD CARS, StciiinboBl, prpw rvini! Meliil ItdOl'i, imfimi'iion oBinsrn or J. P. A, Ar,NTi 273 8camor SI., Cinmnnati, (1. airia-dAn. pi MMESTIC COTTON GOODS, BKU' tIAKEa OF IIKOW AND BLEACHED MUSLINS.C'olton Fl.tiuHa, Blieetliijt, TliksSUIi-e., C.llioei, Ac, Ac., at loweil mar-ket lilt- BAIN SON, aNo. South High Street. KfU'LTi. VNtL Rn.liLfcIil.tt IN THE ANNALS The BwhwvhtiM have a twofold ia one hand. iiTf ftiMe iclmh CuNSlI 1 u been u.ed lth 0. MClttl'lNI'. being the Ail KHIW Ihla Bemeily ha. no MI -t CI KNT6' LINKN 6UIKTS, ol eiii-rloi .)ullty. I (iohien fllll Pblile. follan, h k Tie., Kid niore,. IlemmH H.nclK"lchlel,en eacollelil ai.oitmeut. For sale by BAIN & SON, No. 29 South High street. . l-Htll iep2!) ' NKKVOri KNKHUI, ami w inn oio-i, i.V.ln i,U'i,'.lli. 111. Ill.llOO tiKNKRATINQ KNOWN, luca.'.ol A'tirooiVio'i', Of Ptottmtim the Fiful roitei., Iioiu any can,., nperior. Wliiilie.lel'a Wemtlni Pieiiar.tlon'' I. Hie mi'u reffuMe foim ol the MrnPHosPHlTM mad. .flni the Original Foimula of llr.frhurchill rur lNql'lRK FOR And ubkvNO otubbi-w tw A Fair Til. I I. a Cer..ln Ciirel mw VHirK.e In 7 on. Bottles. ISI Bottle, for 15 ... .: . 11.. 1 1 1... 2 Tlnee for i Circulars gratis. Buhl tit all r.'.rncl.Me DiugKisl.,auiattbaBoleaeneial iuw iu.,111 .TVIl A HI M V nac'H & linoTimns, uriioleaynlo Doalorsi in OLOTHING Hirlrtatti nliou paid to the mnimlacluiiiig i'f TVTT r,TrI'AIl Y OLOTlUWtt No. 78 I'earl St., tiuoiunau, unio. luplti-oUl ebela, consisting of a Ooorgia, Couth Caroliaa ind Virpiuia Regiment, bad come over from the main land iu sik um all steamers, uuhouuers and tlat-boalB,- and attacked the 20th Indiana Regi ment, who were obliged to retreat, inc ous- mmlinnna Gleamed un outside, while Lul. Haw kins inaiclittl up with six companies and reach ed Hatteras Light by uightlull, a disiance of 13 miles. During Ibe night Colonel Hawkins was join ed by the '-'0th Indiana itegiment, wlio bad passed in ine aatkneBsa taigeuoujroi ioubib bo naa lauuea tor ine pui iiubo ui uuiuok mtiu uB. Colonel Brown reported a loos -ot nity of his men comprising bis sick aud wounded, aud 20 pickets, wUo could not ue caueu 10. tie succeeded iu saving his leuis, proviuiono, &o. On Saturday the iMouticeiio sieamou around the Cape, aud a few miles up met the Rebels marcbiug down tho narrow ucck of laud to attack our troops. The Rebel steamers were also lauding troops to oo-operate with theui. The'y were in easy range, aud the Mouticello opeued upon them wilh Bhells, five 3ecouda fuses, 1118 of which were urea ironi turcuguus iu iuioouuuib and thirty minutes, doing great eiecution. The confederates av nrei trica to sneiter themBolvea but soon broke in every direction nd took refugo upon their vessels. ,A suall naaacd throuch tho whecl houBO of Ibe rarrnv which wua already employed against "ait.. It is reported that their loss muBt have readied "00 or TOO killed and wounded. During the engagement a member of the Indiana icgiimVat. who had beeu taken prisoner, managed to woapo. He look to the surf and was picked up by a boat from tho Monticcb. He reports that the hist Blioll from Ibe Mou-cello killed Colonol Barlow of tho Georgia Regiment, and lhat tho bavoo waa frightful, lie also renorts that whon he escaped he killed a Confederate captain with Ii'ib rovolvcr. Cpon the withdrawal of the Confederates, ine nionu-oello and Susquehanna and tho land forces re turned to llalleraa lulet. . Licutouaut Burkhcad from whom 1 havo ob-aiued the abovo account thiuks that no advance can be made from the Inlet without the support of ft Heel of light draft, vessels. Ho also thinks that our foroes at the Inlet should bo speedily inoreascd,. The Spaulding arrived at the Inlet on the 7th inut with Goneral Mansfield, aud landed her men and stores. Too much praise cannot be ecoorJcd to Lieut. Braiu fur this brilliaut achievement, which huB oaused great exultation at Old I'uinl. Colonel Browu narrowly escaped witu mo flflth Indiana Rezimcnt. Ho was shelled from the Confederate vessels, and troops were landed bnlh above and below him. Vet be managed to escape with comparatively small loss. The par ticulars of bis masterly movciueui n u arrived. Nkw York. Oct. tl. -Tho balloou which was seen over Washington a few days ago, proved to SAPONIFIER! Important to Families! Save Time, Trouble, and Expense. FARE REDUCED. STONINCTON LINE roH. BOSTON, GB0TON, WBW LOUDON, mpK BXONINGTON, FKOVIDKWrc, UKW. ' U55'irise5rf' PtKT. TAUflTOU AND HEW BED- Uay, at 6 o'clock V. M., (Except Sundays.) froil Tier S. Cortl.ndt Street, N. R. Tele BOSTON PROVIDENCE... OKOTON NEW LONDON NEWPORT TAUNTON NKtVjBEDfORD :).rm, usu, , l.w, . I 50, . -.6", . 3.00. . 3.V.S Deck.. leek.. ..Ju.OI) .. HOD .. l.OU .. 1.00 i A SPECIFIC BEHEDY tl Bpermatorrhea, ortiemiual Weakneki, and Gen ltat irriinuxiiijr iu ccoci This Malady, the rcriWif coaiw.Hfiicei of wVch are too well known to require more than a bare allntoo to tLent, If one of the most Insidious, and llierforo diiiietoii., ol all the Iodk catalogues ot human ills. It sua. il.e very Deck T AI B BOOMS, each, extra 2.25 1.00 Tie .toamers PLYMOUTH BOCK, Mundayi, Wednaa- c'uMONwIaLTH, Tuesdays, Thuisdaj. and Batiu- da I rf-Freight taken at Reduced Rales."538 Ool ernment P.a.eB taken on till. Route, OinJ-of tbaOcSo. 115 West St. '.. C , Fork, Aag. 29, USUI. W. M. EDWABD8, Jl oct J Agent, M. T. TUB gSjf;, BEST i!,liSJ THE MARKET ARTICLE FOB MAKING Mcrtliaut Tailor. springs of Lite, rapidly nuderuine. the const autiou, and links the unhappy victim intoluibecllltyand aWemalure grave! From one to sii boles ol the Sl'KClllU TILL efl'ct a permanent cure in ine host aouaAv.iyn casks, whether CoiMfiiiiiouaf, oi arising how ifliuc oi',ft.,;ie. MEDICAL TESTIMONY. " W. believe it to be, In the tieatment of SpermiVrrlfo, as near a Srtctnc as any medicine can be." B. turn, u n T Am Jour, ot tleAiatl fcl.ncr. "l'havefoond tbem oil lhl could hu Jimei. rhelr "fleet ba. BtiiH 1BP1.K woMiiiErot. I need Ihemiln a caaa of bpermatorrhea of long ..loinldoj which ha. bee under treatment for ,ir... I think three boie. will fcm-plete the cure." E. P-Dickei, M. D. i &tr This ia not a Homceopathlc Bomedy.oris there toy mercury or other deleterion. Ingredient comblntd with "pnrrr ner Box. Six Boxe. for IS, by Mail, ore- paid. For eote by all respectable Druggists, and at the iole General Depot in tnc uniteo Biai-e. oy J. WINCH KSTKB, 3ii John St., N. V. ROBERTS A SAMUEL, Agent., oc K-dJIaw ly SOFT SOAP! On pound equal to 8ix pounds r o t Jl. s n r i For Bale at Wholesale, by Fenn'a. Salt Manufact'g. Co. PITTSBURGH, PA. And by all Druggi.t. Grocer. 1b the Waited State., ocUS-d-litawly-aw iMverttt, lying at the mouth of the Mississippi, visited New Orleans on the 21st ulU A deupatch dated New Orleans, September J'.ttb, says Ihe steamship Niagara, and a sloop of war wa oil the South East bar aud steam frigate at the Bouih West 1'aas. The sloop of war Vinoenues and the steam gun-boat Waler-witoh were inside the South West bar. The Governor of North Carolina has issued a proclamation forbidding any baeon and leather being sent out of the Slate. The Memphis Argut of the 3d, contains the following proclamation concurring entirely in the view expressed by the cotton factors of New Orleans. In the annexed communication, is a petition from business men, praying that no cotton be sent to New Orleans during the existence of the blockade : And 1 have determined to lake the most decided means to prevent the landing of any cotton in this city. Notice is therefore hereby gwen to all masters and owuers of steamboats and other water orafts, that from and after Ihe 10th of October, no cotton must be brought to New Orleans, or within Ihe lines embracing that section of llio country between the fortifications above Carrolton and those below the city, and extending back lo the lakes. All steamboats or other water craft arriving within the prescribed limits willbe forthwith plaecd in oharge of an armed furce, and escorted above the point indicated. This courso will be adopted in all cases whether the iitiantity or cotton brought be large or small. Tho Railroad companies have already issued orders iu furtherance of the object of this proclamation, and no violation of theni will be permitted. Signed THOS. O. MOORE, Governor of Louisiaua. 1 shall co-operate with Governor Moore iu the euforcemeul of the above order. Signed D. E. TWIGGS, Maj. Gou. Commanding. Colonel McReady, late editor or ihe Louisville Courier, will take command of a regiment uu-dcr General Buck ner. The Ciliicns' Bank of New Orleans is, circulating five'dollar notes cut in two, each piece to represent two dollars and a half. Thirteen hundred Indian warriors crusned the Arkausas river near Furl tmilh on the 2 ilh ull., eu route for MoCulloch'a army. Goneral Whitfield, late of Kansas, is abo moving towards Southern Missouri, at the head of Texan troops. The Federal Drioouers sent lo New Orleans were escorted to their quarters iu that cily by a colored company. , An exchange of shots and shell look place on tho i!0th ult. between Ihe Federal man-of-war Waterwilch and the Confederate steamer Joy, without damage on eithor side. A boat from the Waterwilch landed some men at the Telegraph Station, at the head of the pasaes, who carried oft' the instruments. The Confederate steamer South Carolina had captured a Mexican Bleanier ofl Galveston. George Davis and W. J. Dorlich were eleoled Senators from North Carolina for the Confederate Conerous. It is reported that 15'000 Confederate troops are between Green River and Nashville, and about a reeinient tier day were arriving at Nashville from Boulhorn points. The Confederates claim lo have 40,000 men in Kentucky. Tho rumor of Ind'capture of New Orleans is revived at Nashville, and the details thereof are said lo have been reoieved there. Tn.mnrrnw nicirniiiu's ioumal will ooutaiu the correspondence between General Anderson and I .. . . . .. -.1:1 t IV. ..lali.D In llalaerman late auiior ui urn ... the suopiolou of the Cow ier .aud h'm exodus into tho Soiithorn Confederacy. Kx-Govornor Helm has taken the oath of allegiance lo tho United Stales, aud returned homo. Green River bridgo is mined aud ready lo be blown up by the Confederates. The peudiug congressional elections engross publio attention throughout the Confederacy, lu live States only electoral tickets for the Presidential eleolion are thus far put up. It is evident from the tone of the Southern papers, that the Rebel army of the Potomac will act strictly un tue ueieuaivr. ir...n.nf Ri MarVa fount V. who was . ,.t- .! I! ll. l.g.annHul cn and la ex 11 r LfTUUHIUtUHal a . - mail just arrived from Baltimore. Ibe I ot-mast.r stated lhat there was a number of letters in the mail from Virginia. 1 he parly arrived here to-night, coming up ho nver i J morning. No signs of Rebels in cauip -r butteries were discovei able at Ma'hiat omt. Oeoeial Fremont will follow him closely and h.i.. he fill II Ull uiui. inn of men I ive mm u.nm w. ----- --- , argea wun biciiu8 s t..u.( r,m . j,niWCBn i.000 and 1,0W renet cav.iry provisions from the socesaiouin 1 ' ' f :"' ,Mn near Lisbon, whose object is pre- Bd to. the Rebe . in V.rgm.a n B, u.. .. . belw ayance ,a pcdition lauuiug w , . . . j ihcn fall Dcg upon ao-"- Pmile- from l'iney Toint, a.,1 1; no r. fro . , " P1. "a lJLtailortUo train going . 1... . eindiivnuso o'. .Ml . limo" .-j--. ap.is.l Inlercallng Items from va.nn.gion. Tribune Dispatch. WA8U1.NOTON. Oct. 8. The report of a large Rebel force, dispatched from the Potomac army westward, is unfounded. Detachments from the Sickles brigade, which have beeu scouriug lower Maryland, report the dominant sentiment as violontly rebellious. Not more than three Union flags were seen. Gen. Scott s order, issued lucsday evening, for tho release of Col. Ulair, is Hot yet carried into ellcd. He is still contmed in the barracks at St. Louis. IJ. W.Cole. Tvpe Founder, formerly ot .Brook lvn. lately of Richmond, lelt me latter cuy two weeks since, uudor Jell'. Davis'' proclama tion order ne oil foreigners, and has arrived hiro. He left 7,000 troops in Riohntond, but only three guns mounted. Three or four hundred negroes were building numerous forts. ... 1 II..I r..ll Mi,, nf . Plnv- be La Mouutuiu's, which safely landed in Ma- .. ';,, 1,100 strong, only SUO answered ryland. It appears that after rising to a ccr- ' b T Mf) no Ur m(ljlg ai tain distance, and (Hiding the ourrent righ , he - BaltilBoro New Vork and .other places cut. the rope aud roso to Iho height of three Throe hundred noauds of iiate typo miles, obtaining a cotuplclo view ot mo rcuo arrived front jhc north and passed as encampments and nioTcmcnls, wliicli imporlnnl ..', plale8 rrom the Mothodist Bdok Con- coiu, from Jno. 11. Lester, a- n Alive of Conncot- uows he has communicated lo tho Wao Depart ment. Illulilv ImiMUtnxl iiom l.c Soiitu Cei. t.ue of titw Uilenna. Lomsvn.i.K, Oct. 8. Rivhuiond ptpors of the lai'nml 1'lmilentoii of tho :)d mat. ure received. .... ,i. r ihn t;ih. tionnrnl I.ea loiucd JauicS river. ... r..,. ..iu i., Inir llirtil in Richmond. r.,mi.rt i iionHnw Hlnlf. F ovd s Joseph h. btrcclcr h force is represented to bo greatly demoralized oiale Judge of the Su ka. . C'HARRA & CHERRIER, MERCHANT TAILORS ' AMD DUUU IN tloclis, Fxauch and Kngll.h t.aalineres SILK8, OBKNADINKbi AND rLCSH TESTINGS. Parlif nlar aliention paid to tbe man' nfaflure of Military Goods. Goods made lo Order and Warranted to Fit. No. 130 South nigh St., eugje-ttm COLUMBTJB, O KOBEBT3 & SA-lvIXJEX, riRAI.kR IN Oralis. Meutrliira, t'lie.nlcal.. IKJUORS fOR MEDICAL FURt'OSES Faint., Oils, Vaialihea, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass, F.rruineiy and Fancy Articles, Artist.' Color, and Bushes, Water Color., faint and Tarnish Brashes, Trusae.:Bapporter.,ac. reprfesci imn Ihe battloof Curnifax Ferrj: and Wises Goucralship ia severely critiziscd by llic Richmond papers. The Enrjuircr savB the relations bolwocu Geu- erals Floyd and Wiso aio painTul enough lo cx-nl..in all niir reverses in Western Virginia. General Wiee. accompanied by Genetal llen- ninrqpii. has arrived iu Richmond". The former vill .vrclmbly be court marlialcd. Gen. Lee takes commaud of Ihe forces tinder him.nlf and Flovd. A statement in the Galveslou Xcw makes lha number of Texan troops now in tho field 20,000, of which 3,000 are in Vireiuia, d,000 iu Western Missouri and Arknuuas, and 1,000 in Arizona and New Mexico. Robert, Scott aunotiucca himself a candidate for tho Confederate Congress for Fai-quar. Dis trict. .. Communication over tho Last leuiiessce ivail- oarl ban been interrupted lot Bomo days in con sequence of the washing away of the track by the Hoods. President Davis lett lor ManasBas on the ,n.l. ..1 oum un. . r . . 2 - There is great rejoicing througnout theUouth hBd to go wuuoui m ", capture of Lexington and the Fremont coBee and sugar were '"'P"-" C3 AH JK. BKMIJDIAL -VC:t:lSJT THIS DELICIOUS TONIO BTIHTLANT, .cnLrlll.l.V DESIUNED Wll TUB. K1 i.iTwwMiec! thfio-cf ' id t-Ua.Jti-.atul " RrhiiHitna Ibe piomlnenl phy.lcisns, ehemlsl. nI0Jr,'r"- .ii r ihnu inlriH.ic medicine qualities (tool ud diuretic) which belongs to an "" V" jf lha ifofiial Proanon and th famlt, bvl" UlU., ' "ATOOl I - I , etc., IS uow e-noieen oy nil v I. 1..M I v .11 rfniv.l.t.. urocele 84 North HiKh.tret. (east aide). few dool.no.thof "'"P " 1U"1 """rZ BINtNtiKR Cf).. ""t. ' I (EsablUhed In 1778.) oie n-oprieiore, aorftwtf I . nrond .trrtt, New Tork, For into by all the principal Druggliaand Grocer. In tVH.aCOTT-BABBER. Wonld aotlfy hi. numerous frlind. and cn.tomer. that h. baa returned, aad will hereafter ba found at his old tand ander Bartllt A Smith'. Bank, High street. He aollclt. a r.turn ot bis old en.tomtr, ot2 flolnmLii.. .i.. i .nd famlllarltvalth the reontre. ment. of Druggists, and our superior jnsiness facilities enable ns to furnish them with cholreLlqnors for medi- aalam lauiiy use. iciit, recently a citnou ot urookiyu. one Bloat, und olher northerners, were engaged iu nlinrinir four huudred uuiBkcts a week, and innniifacturiue sewinir machines. A number of ufernal machines Had- been piaueu on -ine 3 hero is a company uiauulaolur- as been appointed Asso- perior Court of Nebras- Ueiald Dispatch. Doctors Hainialon and Swalm of tho 11th Brooklyn regiment, who were taken prisoners at Bull s Run, arrived here this evening via f'ort Monroe, from Hicbmond. ihey were re leased iu parole aud oame with the 67 wounded prisoners. They give almost nepiorauie account of the condition of our wounded aud tho man ner Ihey have been treated by the reoois. ao- oordiug lo thotr account, our pusoners nave suffered the torments ol ine damned, anci ine wonder is that any ot tbem are now auve. it now appears that the 67 wounded whom Ihey released, were cases the rebel doctors could not cure, and therefore were permitted fo return home. The rebel government nan learueu Bomelhiug regarding the probable expedition uoiilb, aud it produced tho greatest excitement throughout the Gulf and Cotton Slates. It was believed that vast numbers of the troops now in Virginia would be cauea to ine respective States where these attacks were apprehended. There was a great scarcity ot provisions auu also of medicines. Our wounded frequently xea, pro- over the captu iliffiniilt v. J . . . , .! . i l e :il General A. 11. DriBooun uic-u n. otimuiervuie, Ro-ith Tarolina. on Ihe iM ult. A South Carolina Kcgimont naa leu lor Suf folk. Vireiuia. A Iliuhffioim tiespatcu iu miu .naiieston Courier, says that President 1'avls was received at Fairfax uoun Mouse wm. gicm. cimuubi &am. General Van Dorn is assiguea to uuty in the t . 1. n rAl.im.K Mansfield Lovcll, late of New York is appoint- c!ude its passage by the Rebel force. It can od Brieadier General, aud assigned to duly iu now be crossed only by the bridges, all wniv-n m Louis re in possession of our army. . 1 . .. . 1 IliPniin ri.iiif ilia nn I Tna 1riiiilkl rpilftril tt rharcei ft i a in 8 t federaoy at tho inefficiency of the mail arrange- uiout have not yet reached head quarters, and " I ftiA fiftflA rpmninn in ft g til tit QUO, 01 V Potter or the 1st Michigan Regiment died On Saturday last, by orderof CommisBioncr . :. A.. l? " ' oi 6i.. f T.r,knu r,...n l.i.Mi. Cashier U. S. N.. with a dela--h- FeSh VlOieo-n-ersirsaiu ment o? To men, accompanied by two detective f.rbc ood "l"10""' proceeded to W. Marys nver on the Some French naval officers from tho onre for love or money Tho question of a successor to Jen. xtavis. was being agitated throughout the Soulh, and gene-r.l Lcilirf wall that Alex. Stephens would be agreed upon. Tho feeble state of Davis1 health e . i V. . ... In ll.a was used as an .rgumcni sj.iuoi. u.,... .v event, however, of a permanent rcitoralion it is tho intention of the Rebel government to make him a Licuteuaut-Gcneral. The heavy rains of the last 21 hours have swollen the river to sucn an extent as 10 .n ConcUe Jacob Bell, and on Sunday arrested J no. Thom- 1'iom T'niici!e. rennt,,'! Troo),, in th: Coiilr.lemlc ArmyTh'ir UentntliUoiH'tiiHl in fic 't'"- Jolm- ttviis Jlvvniiiih Troops M-viwj S'v th. Fiom Oar Bpwl.l Corn pomU-ut. NABHVU.I.K, Sepl. 21, IWil-The Si ale of Tennessee beinp; next to Virginia, Ihe most populous of tho weeded Wales, its conlribiiiion of Iroops to the Confederate j Arm. liliewiar rank, aecillld iu number. B'lt respectabre as ils contingent is, it comes not by any menus up lo ihe commuu caiiiuatrs vt its strength. Previous lo my departure from Ihe North, a statement, was circulating iu the press that "Tennessee had furnished a quol.t of no less Ihau 115,1100 men. This hgurc is ir auuve Iho mark. Some six weeks ago, a statement, prepared by the Governor in response to a resolution of the Confederate Congress calling lor detailed information as lo Iho number oi troop, raised by the several Stales, appeared in one of Ihe dailies of this city. According to Tennessee had at that lime U1 rcgimenjs ot infantry, 10 oouipauica of cavalry, and b batteries in the field. A list Of Iho companies Composing this force, published at the same time, showed, however, that they averaged only about 70 rank and lilo. Allowing them ic, we have only : .H leKllueul.of flllautiy 110 compaule. ol i ineu each) In companies of t'avahy tt v.mjauies of Artillery t : : woo Making the usual allowance for Iobbcs by sickness, discharge, desertion, etc, it may be safely assumed that the Tennessee forces iu the f'niitmlcralo service do not excoed Uo.OOO iu number.- The Northern estiiuaio of o5,00i was doubtlessly based upou au allowance of 1,000 men for each regiment serving. Tbo principal commanders of tho Tennessee forces are Major-General Pillow aud Brigadier-Generals B. F. Cheatham, Caeswoll, Foster, Anderson, and Zollicoflcr. -Polk is a Major-General in the Confederate sorvice, holdidg a direct appoint pient from Jefferson Davis. Of the former, Pillow and Zollieoffor aanlocedculs are familiar in vnnr Traders. Gen. Casswull ia a politician of some local notoriety, but without military experience. Cheatham, one of the numerous family of the same uamo that have long beeu identified with the history of Nashville aud Middle Teuuesuec, is a gent lemauly blackleg a rockleus gambler aud habitual toper. ' He was first captain and afterward colonel of the 8d Tennessee regimout ia the Moxican war. Bob Foster is bIbo a character -of some prominence iu this vicinity. Ho likewise served in tbe Mexican war. He is neither much respected as a man, nor considered a military genius so much so, that bo has thus far been kept at home n commaud of Ibis militia distriot. Ihereoord of Gen. Sam. R. Anderson, commanding inc Tennessee brigado under Geu. Lee, is still more illuminous. His private character is ot tne worst description. He has been guilty ot many swindling operations; among others, 'one -by which h robbed an orphan boy under his guardianship of his entire inheritance. As a politician, however, he had some standing aud iutlueuce; He was for niauy years the rost-mastur of Ihia city, relinquishing the office only laBt March. On the whole, tho TcucBsee Generals are far below the average of Southern comtuaaiucrs and will hardly shed any great luiiter on Iheir native State. . - - Efforts are slill making throughout iho Plato to swell its quota by reoruttiog. ine papers are filled with advertisements of embryo company and regimental organizations. But from the constant and desperate exhortations to en list in the local press it appears mat eitner tuo martial ,ardcr has considerably cooled off or lhat tho fighting material is nearly exhausted. In this city naraiy anyiuiuR 01 sniu uo"' i life is perceptible, como uoiuo uuaru couirm- j ules had irregular drills; this is about all. The truth is, that, deduoting the nearly 60,000 Union votes polled at tho last eleotion, there aro only about 120,000 rualos between tho ages of 18 and 00 in the Stale, nearly one-fourth of whom are already enlisted a" percentage that includes pretty inuoh all disposed and able lo fight. , ,, , . , Governor, or rather "King Harris," has just followed in the wake of Johnson, aud proclaimed the nocessity of an additional levy of 30,000 men in his Stato. Uis Majesty may be, like the General-in-Chief, fully couviuced of the necessity of this number, but I greatly doubt that he has confidence in.his ability to hum and organ ize this additional, army in uis aommionu. n. rabble of a few thousand raw militiamen wil. probably be huddled together, to scatter like chaff before the wind when brought face to face with the Federal forces. 1 only trust that the "king" will place himself at the head of his gallant subieclB, just summoned to rcpol the threatened Yankee invasion, and lead them in person tobattle. While sojourning in Louisville, I was ollen disgusted by the pusillanimity shown by Union men, when dwelling upou the possibility of au invasion of their Slate by Confederate forces. Their ability .to tUrcnd themselves was never thought of, but oowardly speculations as to the strength and povorly of the rebels indulged in. 1 can uow give tho assurance lo my Louisville friends, lhat they are not the only ones living i .v..,- .n,l irombliue. Tho friclil on this side is just as great as on their own. The people of Nashvillo are just as apprehensive ot the ap-poarancc of ruthless Lincoln minions before iheir city as llio citizens of Louisville aro of a j..i,.i; nf iheii-a bv savane rcbols. The pa- c tl, lit. feanlinnnnpl I n ( hllV pcrs bore are nueu mm readers to rise en masse, and prepare to meet i the "hordes of Abolitionists now pouring into Kentucky from the North for the subjugation of their Slate;" and the burden of the street talk is the "impending invasion." About five hundred troops havo passed through here for Bowling Groen since my last, whence 1 was unable to learn. The general opinion is, that some regiments arc on tho way fir tho same destination from Eastern Virginia, t ininli however, that tho call of Gov. Harris for thirty lliouBand additional men, in response lo a requisition irom uov. ouiiubiuu, in guuu idenco that the General's appeal for help at Richmond has been fruitlcBS, aud that nothing .n i. snared from the army of the Potomac There is another tremendous scare along the coast. Late dispatches from New Orleans convey a rumor of the occupation of Mississippi riivhvB, naval foroo of Federalists, aud de scribe the excitement produced by the news as defying description. No definite intelligence T . " t . 1 a.I alia. t T fo,l A(.a 1 An had, however, oecn rc-coi., v,.... authorities refusing to commuuicate what they know refusal which looks rather omiuous. OUl. . ... . .!.... u Col. Coffee, of.BooneTilie, pawo---here for St. Louis? but it has been -w-rtuM lhat he ison his way South with important d - u-neiiis containing an omciai eeedingsof the mocV Legislature held at Lx.-iug'on recently. ' . A scout from Linn Creek report! the probable death of the notorious rebel leader, the Rev. Meekel Johnson, who, while moving some or Dupont & IV's powder on Friday last, wa fJen- smmubIv wounded by lb .('won oi ouo b .. . l ,..u ;ll ..rnk.ltltf la.?. lien, r remoni anu emu wm for Scdli lo morrow. A special dispatch lo the St. Louis Rubhwn s J it aeems to bo the belief in mililtry ctro te bare that General Price will avor . m.w ilh General Freinont, if pi-iibiuie, " ' cuterlaiu Ihe opiuinn that ne liwi 7 siirprise upon some poiat I fie' least and lhat we enan nave - -, ,-lieu. Fremont designs lo follow Hie R.-bc "'my into Arkausis and force tnem 10 ngm w..vU.-er he caa eiioounlor Ibcm. .,'., ,.,. , The Paymasters who brought $1,200,000 to pay off llio troops to Ibe aist ol August, have discharged their duty and returned to Bl. Louis. ' ,,.i', Claib Jackson is reported en route lo lexaJ. The farmers of Pettis County recently oftered lo luruisu uonerai rremoui, b'1"i 000 worth of grain. rnnlain Chamniou. the rebel who was last week, has bcon arrested as a spy iu Georgetown, and is now a prisoner. ' w-ilh $'-'50, heie (RON NOItTII CAROLINA. Kiicsuii'iii'Kt nf lite-Jolt. Imll.ntinl-neiK-loyally .r I lie Nurtls t.tolliilu Renal 'Irooi'. act liom Vliglnl" 1 Drretxl III. Ui.Bai-How Ilia I'nli... Men are Drsgenneil- Force, nl fnrt Wen lloiv Dala Feel about tl.e Lo.a ol ll.t-ter.s.(Coii.'spniKleiice of Ihe N. Y. Tribune. Camp Wool, Hatteras Inu.t, 1 North Carolina, Sept. 1861. The 201h Indiana regiment arrived here yesterday from Fortress Mouroe. They are lo encamp at Chicamacomico, a joint 4 miles fiom here, situated at the olher end of the island. Two mon escajied from Beaufort aud came all the way to this point in a small sail boat, arriving here yesterday moruing. They wete . chased all one day by men in two boats, but still Ihoy escaped. Ihey represent a desperate stale ot things at Beaufort. The families have all abandoned llioir Bomes, anuine soiuma wun are there live iu constant expectation of a tight wilh us. Since these forts were takeu, troops, have been forwarded from Virginia to Beaufort, Newburn, and other points. When tho news came that Fort Hatteras waa taken by tbo United States, a serious turn was given to tho popular mind, and some were in favor of having the State, by its Legislature, resolve itself back into the Union. Hereupon , sides wore taken and blows were struck. lbs Secessionists had all the arms, ana mey or course had tbo upper hand. Ono man declared "He was a Union man, aud not ashamed to confess it." At this expression he was taken inM a shop, his nose put into a vice, aud sciewcd nearly out of bis bend; and (ho lips which uttered tbo sentiment were treated in the same way, and both marly pulled out of thrir face. A lady just from Wnshtuton, N. C, tells me that about the same lime a company of men were assembled in a store and extolling the Secession Hag, when au old Revolutionary soldier (the only ouo kuowu lo be, living iu North Carolina) interfered, and asked" the Secessionists if they knew how much the old Stars aud Stripes cosl? He said he did, for ho fought under them, and saw them when first raised, aud that he would never recognize another. At this ho was taken, his head half shaved, a plaster put on, aud the plaster covered with tar, and the tar with feathers, and then ho was hurled into the street! Who would think lhat n soldier of Washington would ever bo subjected lo such treatment iu the laud where Washington himself was once almost worshipped ns if ho woro a god? How long will Americans allow such things to be? Those ro but samples of v series of barba rous acts, Winch to'-WCUUOU inctu scparatciy would fill a dozen rages, and only make oue's blood curdlo in his veins lo lliink of them. ; There aro five humtTod men iu Fort Macon, and about a hundred guns mounted. The bombproof Is covered with railroad iron, and Ihe center of the fort is filled with water, intended to pro? ent bombs from bursting. There are three thousand men about four miles from Beau-fort, and a thousand mon havo been sent iuto this (Hyde) county; so lhat as soon as wo enter the main land we may expect eome hot work. These men inform us that whon the news came into North Carolina- that wo had taken these forts, Jeff. Davis, when ho heard it, telegraphed back that iho forts should be relokcu if it cost him tho lives of ten thousand men. ByHie way, it will not. be amiss perhaps, to inform Jeff, that be must make calculations lo lose quite that number and cyen more, should' ho ever try to recapture this point. No doubt it is a serious drawback to the Confederacy to i.nvo this inlet for prizes under Undo Sam's care; for it was through this inlet that most of the Northern vessels woro taken by Jcfl s pri- We had a great gale here yestorday. The oscan cast itself upou Iho beach with almost the noise of seven thunders. The land -was partly overflowed, and some of the tents wore carried about by the winds. As the breakers hurled themselves upon the beach, ihey carried with them hundreds of line fish, which lay upon the beach lo tho intense gratification of our Zouaves, who wero waiting to bo relieved from "salt junk." .Two different congregations have, at two different times, invited Mr.. Conway, Chaplain of Hawkins' Zouaves, to preach lor them, which he has douo. He finds ihe people up tbe country some sixteen miles as favorable to our oausc auu as siuuetcgr uu .uv down hero. Tho health ot our troops is goon, notwithstanding the bad waicr wo unua auu the oxposurc which we are sutyeuie-.i . . and ague. Colonel Hawkins is aniiuus to be ordered, with sutlicieul force, over into the main laud, where we may share ine giory . from North lo Soulh Carolina a plHCO where our boys arc going to do a iniug or two. POSTSCRIPT. H tTTKTlAS, N. G, Sept. J'J, lfilil. To Vte Editori of the X. Y. Tribune: Sia: As Iho pooplo hero have beeu unable to raise any provisions on those Band banks, they have usually provided themselves with them from the msiu land across the sound, a distance of some 45 miles, and as that means of procuring any means of subsistence is now out off by their declaring their allegiauce to the tinin,. the of necessity are ou the verge of ercat suffering,. and already it has commenced for I to-day saw a wholo family destitute of shoes, aud wun no provision, w . lies and a small amount of corn. 1 Ins slate of " i . ...,.. I .a. 1 Iitr Aiit i unit art if nr. thiugs can ouiy uc rem'..-., -v -i j cualion of a point on llic main land. irie Ittlrealiiig"lo AlkiHiNHs Fremont in pursuit A Itelirl Lender llloun Up. JtrrLR80N City, Oct 6. X anacial despatch to the St. Louis Democrat - - i a.tl Little doubt is entertained here lhat General Price is on his way South with the main body hi. force. Hie force reported to be making demonstrations near Georgetown and Scdalia, m.r.lv a detachment for the purpose of keep- ;r nr advance euard eneaeed. When latt heard from General Price's advance'guard was at Clinton, Henry county. It is supposed that Prioe will pushtorwara to me ArauB tiuv Kit CARSoN.-li.il Carson is iu command of the First Ucgimeui oi ontucrio a. Union, New Mcnco, auu mucu bkmbi.ui.uu . felt at the general appearance and efhoieuoy ot his command. ""Six Fk'tT SfcVKH IXCHKS 01 VOM'M ftaRU. A recruit named Carter, in the Indiana Eleventh, is six foet seven inches in height, and weighs two hundred and forty pounds. While lying fiat on his back on the ground, lie dehes four ordinary well muscled men to prevent him from using to his fec. He is one of tho most powe: ful men, imiscularly, ever seen.

.--.it Tl it. in a wily IliP - - - - . - VOLUME XXV COLUMBUS. OHIO. TIIXRSDAY MORIS IN G. OCTOBER 10, 1861. NUMBER 04. - .,T I UQteU, ncfauranf. BANFOBD8 LIVER INV1 G0RAT0 R COMPOUNDED KNTIRHLV MtOJI ,, and ba. -m. r ---.--. . in Ui.u knnM and ar med It. and ia now rwortedl lb. dleeaeea I"' which it Ilka cured tbcueende bo had glvea op all bopH anecllcltea eertincai. The doee mint be adapted Miciritial ukln it, and . a.ntlv UU the DUW' Let the dicte. cf your MoftheilPr'-iiira onHPLAlNW. IMtfKVC-lA, CHHOhlCi nMPL!n. vthtrt-filOMAVU, BABITVAL i'BVlUM, CBOLEBA F A S T U M , FI.TV-FKfALB WBABNBt-, rfnlly ae n fIRI'INA-i tINS. ItwIlleuierjJC'B' ends testify) fa tieeatirt .j.i,'f ai ooia- Rf IT n A Tl B 1 1 J a r, 11 'J K O O j z oe w 1j to with conMeac ta alt Httia thelMt two yean of relief, aa the Bananas m, poaseanoa .how. to the temperament of tne need t aock a,uaatlttaau . ... 1 ' ...... OJUrt, and " cn MLLIVl'B .AJ.var-, DUBBUOBA, BVMMKB rear, pbopbt, sees odsr rEiie&e.MOLW, MOHBVB.VHOIEBA IN-LUNCH, J AOS mot, EH. and may be used int. uriDAine. (aa tho.- meuoemaot of attack. GlVlaU Unu weio. TB WITH TUP, INFJfl. ::m. id ahhllo boi rorni. Filet OMPllw pet BattU. ALSO ' ANronir- RinilD PURIFYING PILLS. ..i.aentl'nM'afin tTHtlM rK TrirtABI V IXIBAVTH. AND PVTVP1 The a ' ' IV- I hot wttve Whim', 0d tn hie pnM.lltni"le Th roniianllytniri--whi h- long mA tie len btib all Mpreee In diid mo tu s than Th l'iufeel"0 etl tbeitive tn dlflc.Hit The FAMILY Cl-eilth due tefeteuia lu tllo coipanndwf ftom a rtrm-itia.te,UKh a'.t allte inti caoal. aad eie ANQJtMKIIla of lh r Wis, l-MI-'l 1! THJfi- THI Vt HOIK BUUT, fiwuefll'i H neglected, F ATPE- t'ftsiTtoa ' coli) PMTLKSfMWi!, HtAD-T U UlCAl!, lt IB- . u 1 ufiKMll In . P. A D t " I " 1 f.UEOMATf,UI, a ieal not many dlaMW" IiIlL!' omeutloB lu V'" ""'"fi Vuj-T..b inn FAUILTVA ,hUta V- the TtadMlle ftfaniifactutei and Fi?prletj)l , illttf etoaaway, new TBiBl flltU a gen-whlob aproprletor hu the aa yeara. lug iwmaod Oom inoee VlhM, and he eatiflac rettard to their nee, hae la-within the reach of alt. now that dlfforentCat-(H-ittoiie of the bowel. TilABTIO P 1 1 L baa, wll ejrtablhhed fvf, " ly of the ptireet Vegetable on etety pa't of the all; GOOD and 6Ar In neMe, aw.h ae DB-3TOMA.OH, 8LIBPI-BACK AHP LOIN8, AMD eOBUNEBa OVEB from indden cold, ethlob end In a long eooraeof Fa-TITI. A CBBBP1HO OVICB TH BODY, ACHfS, or WFIUHT IB FLAMMATOBY II8. mn.UHIttf or APULIA, PUBIFllCliof the BLOOD fleeh it heir, too nnnieiont tlewoent. BOBB.Itoa. IMM.k. t.rocerlea. WM..H iRESTIEHUX. : (Koocuaoa to al. Kr.a A Butiiapi) -IIKALCB 1M No. 10G South High Si., Colurabne. GROCERIES; raoDuce. psoripwm t-ORUIUN & DOMESTIC I'Ul'ITS, TLOl'B, BALT, L1QUOB8, IO. - Storage and Oommiasion. - v Amrr ST. NICHOLAS HU1LL, Broadway, New; York. Board Reduced -lo $100 per Day. Pmtheow'nlug of thli rait ud commodloui Hotl, 1a.thb.h.-ng...n ..rd co.rtop.7ra.. .i4 to combln. all the alenjenl. K toSrtSli d clal enjoyment i..antwf and modern taate approved; aod the patruaaga .hTt t'h commanded dntliig lha put .ix ''. """i? " " ...7. .nor i. have been ari'tclated. 35.' wwi. m'donud lave Reduced (he 1'rice of Board to TWO DOLLARS PER DAY, .1 the ..me time abating none of the Untitle. iltU which ,h,lr table be. hitherto been ffl-amo A CO. ' " New Yo.k.B.pt.'AUol. . vyU-ilm REMOVAL. IUf l BLMOfEU rtuut No. 108 Suutb Huh BUt ...... K.re.t .bo. Third. Phll.delj.ltl UPTONS. MEWCOMER, rroprulor. eTThi. Holel 1. central, coneenlent by Tawnier dum to all fart, of the . Ity. and In every "" " it. c6mtm t and want, of tU. M-"- TO THEIRINEW STORE ROOM, BOSTON . n,..i'i, rii 'I'll IN HOTKL BK- J. INO completed, wllh .uperlor a:commcrf.tioM for lidta and Oentlemen, w..,pened, on Monday. Feb. 8 The Hoaee IIW'" rr-w... -nr.h. the JOHN V. M1LLU. "oiTaSSr-' No.ia4 South UikIi etroot; he Intentlo. of lb. Fioprlelor. to nm k. 1 1 wor thy t .t,on. of the traveling fuUtio. H. BoulheABl oumer o( High ud Chapel streels l9tf tjue CAPITAL RESTAURANT, V"VitNrTRR OIK (DALE HUU8E.1 TBR otiderilgned h.. taken the room, onder th OoodX tfon.e. whew will bt fcnnd, Ih.afte id op In good .tyiee, me e.n.o. : - : " Kou. but the beet Ale.. Liquor, and Cigar., ke t COX.TJ3S-IBTJS. TELEGAPHIC NEWS. IIYIPORTANTSOUTHERN NEWS CAPTUKE OF MEW ORLEANS! Proclamation of Gov. Moore of Louisiana! Thlittan Huudiad Indian W.nUra k-u 11 out a for nicCullocli'a Army. Hoiillle Tiealmciit of 1'rdeiaJ I'llNOlltlUHt nichmoud. MliUT KEitt UATTER1S lLLT! iUO or 300 Rplfl SleMigli.ervtl! DULL RUN OUT RUN. at v.. ate, Bj'd w.d O. DuBlg nejv medical discovery, ' Uur lira .petdy and jistmanent ewe of Oonotihea'tileel, Urothal DUohatgeB, Cctuinal Weaknmg, Nightly EmiBBionB, luqou-. (iuente, Ueuiul hiilabilily, ,' Giayel, iitriotuit, kud, AlItJoUB ur THE KlItMIIS AI'D SLADDEB, Ulcb ha. been need ty opKarSi of- IltSDUKD PHIIieiA"; with entite mcceip, .uperedjng iwX.ux'; h,,i,Mi0 knowu. eerred totde. at the Bar. ..-.,.. from Ibe Bar .bort, the Proprietor Intend, to keep a Em !.,.,, t W.J. McFEBLI. rorMdtr In stTTlouis hotel. CHESTNUT STREET. ABOVE THIRD, In the Immediate neighborhood of the Jobbing Hontaa on Market, Third, and Oheetnot BtreeU, the Bank., Po.t Ofnte. Merchant. ' ' nanife. c., HUABU PEtt UKt, wi.ohi. Aceommodatlou when ...l,l nn the EUROPEAN PLAN: Boom, from 60 cent, and upward., per day, end Meal, at a FUJI uiaje ui.,,,.,,t attached to the Hotel. Price, avoiding to Tb'city'toiVtak. Paueugei. fiom any Btatlou TO or CLOSB. TO th. Hotel. aj-Kugllh, French, German and Bpaniih ipoken. lylYdom-VBP DledHlue. ROBERTS & SAMUEL, Wholesale and Retail DHtiaaisTs, to MI T II ' S FAGHIONABUJ No.;oJ South High Stieel. DEALER IN Xi A 'i O , O A X' S i : .', AND MILITARY flOODS. Ihe latrat tlyle. of .. ; A. T O yVXVTXJ OAPB , . Alnayicn hand. Alio, parllclar attention paid to order, fcr HAT, CAPS, AND ORNAMENTS. ...i, i ik. M.,k.l nh ih. Lateet and Mew eet Btylea J. H. SMITH foluinbue, Angii.t jb, 1861 dut Good Nan-, from llaltc. n. Inlet t'he k'.ile-my I.Met.nd Defeated with Ore. t Lio.a. Fort Monrok, Oct. 8. Tho frigate Susque-liauua has arrived Irutu llaUcrai Inlet, aud brings uiost interoiiliug iululligcuce. Tho day aftor the capture of tlio n iicllir Fauuy by the IVIicls, the Coras, aud I'uluaui, liaviug ouo of Ihe launches of tho !juaitiehaiina ia tow with seven days jirovisioua, returuiug the same eve-Ding without having seen : anything of U RebeU. Un Friday, however, word reached llalleraa Inlet by the "latais aud ulripes'' lhat l',500 Kit, ... ...savin action, clteueflw avi -oi Uueitt u.uetr the .loma-.l., or inMiregn. . .f, i h.ir . I...!, luteifcra with bu.lu pur.ult..- i ,lCa' h bo i'jntaln. "it JoJen pill.. I 1' HICK ONE L-OLLAB, KnA llll eet.t by 1UI1 poet pato oy any "S" l. . ,.. mmiRV H-jUl DV UlllKKl.t. b"mi'j. n. . .i.....ii, ,ithe wrauosr. WOU,geBU.nT...u. -"8-(;,ALiH A C0.V Vhuleaals Agents, Olucinuatl. r,.r bv II. WIHoii, 8. E. Samuel. A Co., aud Bob-art. A UiuuoU, Columbiu. "'i '"8' iV"'J V - 1 lry Jooil). 91 Sf.jth IllKh Street, (Kaat Bide,) K AltV t!SHH H' II.C..I ' " laigeauSiiien.iooMi oicia oi DttfinH; ' . Mfcl'i''" UHKMICAL'J, riiHia.oti". VABHISHkS, , pic Kiturfs,' WLM1JOW PtjaiBS, rgBFUWEBf. FANCY B0AF8, ToILST ABT1CLB8, Ac, o. We alio kfte on hand an awortnieut of line Hgat, rnre l.l.in,,. for MtJICHl iiuruoacai wilh eory aiticle unnaiiy i . ,.. r l.u 1 1 .-.I u Hinrn. Baviug bnni. arrangwueui. nu ,rijiuB -'- and manulnr.tnt-r., we ar. prepared to oner gotte lu trade, or at retaL, at tinnauaiiy low puce.. t&Goodi llivcred lo fliijf pari o the cily fret K. (. RIclKAikEN, . SUlltT MANUFACTU Kliilv, No. 1 West Fourth Street, OPl'OHITB BTEErLB WITH GOLD HAND. aprndlr ' ELEGANT FALL SHAWLS. tTairKI CA.SilMF.IIE BBAWLC, . 5 W Me Bor.lftoa Stella Shawls. bl.lioid Chetk Fall bliawla. l.rtau Pl.iil Wwi Bliwl'. Pl.inl Raw bilk Shawl.. Mie"' I'1-W and Clmk Fall BhawU. 11. In MerlnoTjhawla. Siiawl Alerlaua, lloidei., Ac. BAIN & SON, No. 29 South High Street, eei'':l If.- atkh rniinr cliiakb, (Jore Trail H'VI' rklil., Ah'tauilie'. KM Ulcve. JiII-wb' .ml Oihlien'. Full IL'i'iy, LailbT ami 0nfa Fall Hoeiciy, I'li l-i (liiriiH UI. ol .11 kinds, Ml.litlnv klMUIlt 1.1. nil Citllcoe. and peL.i.M, jii.l oi eued BAIN t SON, ' No. 2!) South ilish Street. of charge. ROHRRTH A BAMUBL. DAVIDSON & BRO., (onccoi. to OKC. tl. t'U.01,) mi.iiiin KAIST CVHNKH Fir JU ABU wiin cm., 1 1 PIC IMS ATI, O., ' mroBTiae Atiii dh.u.j tl PUBK I'HWB BND MKIiHUNKH, 1UBMIOALS, BtlAt'it, linuouio, TATENT MFiPIClNKU, FAttur ABlll'LAr), PURR WINKS AND M11IJOU3 for Medicinal o.e COAL OIL, lWItNlNfl FLUID, PAINTS, OILS, VARN18HKH, Ac, Ao. All favoring m with a vlU or their onlr will flud onr tock complete aud prlnw moderate. apr lT-deo!ltaw TOE THB PKIf'l: Consuciplton, Asthoa rioN ano cobk or Chronio Bronohitis, Ner vous Prostration, teneral Debilliy, Dyspep sia, Borofula, MtraBmiiB, Loss of Ap-jistitc, Neuralfia, Female Com-plaiuta, aud til Disorders of ' the Nerviitis and Blood ByeiemB. Ihm Remedy has obleinnt a gtfal reputation for most K X T H A OH D I N A K If t H(S IN ALL BTAOF.8 Ok CDNllUAlinON. It l recanmenneu o .u.uj Phf allien, in Ibo Uuil'd Sll'B and ill Knlope liaviug rV-e-- CHtAPEST Hlol llli'4t IM II VHI.K nooriNQ IN USfc. rrxii'if win ir-ui (ol B(')U -f lh For Hi ll M!tiH, RAIL ROAD CARS, StciiinboBl, prpw rvini! Meliil ItdOl'i, imfimi'iion oBinsrn or J. P. A, Ar,NTi 273 8camor SI., Cinmnnati, (1. airia-dAn. pi MMESTIC COTTON GOODS, BKU' tIAKEa OF IIKOW AND BLEACHED MUSLINS.C'olton Fl.tiuHa, Blieetliijt, TliksSUIi-e., C.llioei, Ac, Ac., at loweil mar-ket lilt- BAIN SON, aNo. South High Street. KfU'LTi. VNtL Rn.liLfcIil.tt IN THE ANNALS The BwhwvhtiM have a twofold ia one hand. iiTf ftiMe iclmh CuNSlI 1 u been u.ed lth 0. MClttl'lNI'. being the Ail KHIW Ihla Bemeily ha. no MI -t CI KNT6' LINKN 6UIKTS, ol eiii-rloi .)ullty. I (iohien fllll Pblile. follan, h k Tie., Kid niore,. IlemmH H.nclK"lchlel,en eacollelil ai.oitmeut. For sale by BAIN & SON, No. 29 South High street. . l-Htll iep2!) ' NKKVOri KNKHUI, ami w inn oio-i, i.V.ln i,U'i,'.lli. 111. Ill.llOO tiKNKRATINQ KNOWN, luca.'.ol A'tirooiVio'i', Of Ptottmtim the Fiful roitei., Iioiu any can,., nperior. Wliiilie.lel'a Wemtlni Pieiiar.tlon'' I. Hie mi'u reffuMe foim ol the MrnPHosPHlTM mad. .flni the Original Foimula of llr.frhurchill rur lNql'lRK FOR And ubkvNO otubbi-w tw A Fair Til. I I. a Cer..ln Ciirel mw VHirK.e In 7 on. Bottles. ISI Bottle, for 15 ... .: . 11.. 1 1 1... 2 Tlnee for i Circulars gratis. Buhl tit all r.'.rncl.Me DiugKisl.,auiattbaBoleaeneial iuw iu.,111 .TVIl A HI M V nac'H & linoTimns, uriioleaynlo Doalorsi in OLOTHING Hirlrtatti nliou paid to the mnimlacluiiiig i'f TVTT r,TrI'AIl Y OLOTlUWtt No. 78 I'earl St., tiuoiunau, unio. luplti-oUl ebela, consisting of a Ooorgia, Couth Caroliaa ind Virpiuia Regiment, bad come over from the main land iu sik um all steamers, uuhouuers and tlat-boalB,- and attacked the 20th Indiana Regi ment, who were obliged to retreat, inc ous- mmlinnna Gleamed un outside, while Lul. Haw kins inaiclittl up with six companies and reach ed Hatteras Light by uightlull, a disiance of 13 miles. During Ibe night Colonel Hawkins was join ed by the '-'0th Indiana itegiment, wlio bad passed in ine aatkneBsa taigeuoujroi ioubib bo naa lauuea tor ine pui iiubo ui uuiuok mtiu uB. Colonel Brown reported a loos -ot nity of his men comprising bis sick aud wounded, aud 20 pickets, wUo could not ue caueu 10. tie succeeded iu saving his leuis, proviuiono, &o. On Saturday the iMouticeiio sieamou around the Cape, aud a few miles up met the Rebels marcbiug down tho narrow ucck of laud to attack our troops. The Rebel steamers were also lauding troops to oo-operate with theui. The'y were in easy range, aud the Mouticello opeued upon them wilh Bhells, five 3ecouda fuses, 1118 of which were urea ironi turcuguus iu iuioouuuib and thirty minutes, doing great eiecution. The confederates av nrei trica to sneiter themBolvea but soon broke in every direction nd took refugo upon their vessels. ,A suall naaacd throuch tho whecl houBO of Ibe rarrnv which wua already employed against "ait.. It is reported that their loss muBt have readied "00 or TOO killed and wounded. During the engagement a member of the Indiana icgiimVat. who had beeu taken prisoner, managed to woapo. He look to the surf and was picked up by a boat from tho Monticcb. He reports that the hist Blioll from Ibe Mou-cello killed Colonol Barlow of tho Georgia Regiment, and lhat tho bavoo waa frightful, lie also renorts that whon he escaped he killed a Confederate captain with Ii'ib rovolvcr. Cpon the withdrawal of the Confederates, ine nionu-oello and Susquehanna and tho land forces re turned to llalleraa lulet. . Licutouaut Burkhcad from whom 1 havo ob-aiued the abovo account thiuks that no advance can be made from the Inlet without the support of ft Heel of light draft, vessels. Ho also thinks that our foroes at the Inlet should bo speedily inoreascd,. The Spaulding arrived at the Inlet on the 7th inut with Goneral Mansfield, aud landed her men and stores. Too much praise cannot be ecoorJcd to Lieut. Braiu fur this brilliaut achievement, which huB oaused great exultation at Old I'uinl. Colonel Browu narrowly escaped witu mo flflth Indiana Rezimcnt. Ho was shelled from the Confederate vessels, and troops were landed bnlh above and below him. Vet be managed to escape with comparatively small loss. The par ticulars of bis masterly movciueui n u arrived. Nkw York. Oct. tl. -Tho balloou which was seen over Washington a few days ago, proved to SAPONIFIER! Important to Families! Save Time, Trouble, and Expense. FARE REDUCED. STONINCTON LINE roH. BOSTON, GB0TON, WBW LOUDON, mpK BXONINGTON, FKOVIDKWrc, UKW. ' U55'irise5rf' PtKT. TAUflTOU AND HEW BED- Uay, at 6 o'clock V. M., (Except Sundays.) froil Tier S. Cortl.ndt Street, N. R. Tele BOSTON PROVIDENCE... OKOTON NEW LONDON NEWPORT TAUNTON NKtVjBEDfORD :).rm, usu, , l.w, . I 50, . -.6", . 3.00. . 3.V.S Deck.. leek.. ..Ju.OI) .. HOD .. l.OU .. 1.00 i A SPECIFIC BEHEDY tl Bpermatorrhea, ortiemiual Weakneki, and Gen ltat irriinuxiiijr iu ccoci This Malady, the rcriWif coaiw.Hfiicei of wVch are too well known to require more than a bare allntoo to tLent, If one of the most Insidious, and llierforo diiiietoii., ol all the Iodk catalogues ot human ills. It sua. il.e very Deck T AI B BOOMS, each, extra 2.25 1.00 Tie .toamers PLYMOUTH BOCK, Mundayi, Wednaa- c'uMONwIaLTH, Tuesdays, Thuisdaj. and Batiu- da I rf-Freight taken at Reduced Rales."538 Ool ernment P.a.eB taken on till. Route, OinJ-of tbaOcSo. 115 West St. '.. C , Fork, Aag. 29, USUI. W. M. EDWABD8, Jl oct J Agent, M. T. TUB gSjf;, BEST i!,liSJ THE MARKET ARTICLE FOB MAKING Mcrtliaut Tailor. springs of Lite, rapidly nuderuine. the const autiou, and links the unhappy victim intoluibecllltyand aWemalure grave! From one to sii boles ol the Sl'KClllU TILL efl'ct a permanent cure in ine host aouaAv.iyn casks, whether CoiMfiiiiiouaf, oi arising how ifliuc oi',ft.,;ie. MEDICAL TESTIMONY. " W. believe it to be, In the tieatment of SpermiVrrlfo, as near a Srtctnc as any medicine can be." B. turn, u n T Am Jour, ot tleAiatl fcl.ncr. "l'havefoond tbem oil lhl could hu Jimei. rhelr "fleet ba. BtiiH 1BP1.K woMiiiErot. I need Ihemiln a caaa of bpermatorrhea of long ..loinldoj which ha. bee under treatment for ,ir... I think three boie. will fcm-plete the cure." E. P-Dickei, M. D. i &tr This ia not a Homceopathlc Bomedy.oris there toy mercury or other deleterion. Ingredient comblntd with "pnrrr ner Box. Six Boxe. for IS, by Mail, ore- paid. For eote by all respectable Druggists, and at the iole General Depot in tnc uniteo Biai-e. oy J. WINCH KSTKB, 3ii John St., N. V. ROBERTS A SAMUEL, Agent., oc K-dJIaw ly SOFT SOAP! On pound equal to 8ix pounds r o t Jl. s n r i For Bale at Wholesale, by Fenn'a. Salt Manufact'g. Co. PITTSBURGH, PA. And by all Druggi.t. Grocer. 1b the Waited State., ocUS-d-litawly-aw iMverttt, lying at the mouth of the Mississippi, visited New Orleans on the 21st ulU A deupatch dated New Orleans, September J'.ttb, says Ihe steamship Niagara, and a sloop of war wa oil the South East bar aud steam frigate at the Bouih West 1'aas. The sloop of war Vinoenues and the steam gun-boat Waler-witoh were inside the South West bar. The Governor of North Carolina has issued a proclamation forbidding any baeon and leather being sent out of the Slate. The Memphis Argut of the 3d, contains the following proclamation concurring entirely in the view expressed by the cotton factors of New Orleans. In the annexed communication, is a petition from business men, praying that no cotton be sent to New Orleans during the existence of the blockade : And 1 have determined to lake the most decided means to prevent the landing of any cotton in this city. Notice is therefore hereby gwen to all masters and owuers of steamboats and other water orafts, that from and after Ihe 10th of October, no cotton must be brought to New Orleans, or within Ihe lines embracing that section of llio country between the fortifications above Carrolton and those below the city, and extending back lo the lakes. All steamboats or other water craft arriving within the prescribed limits willbe forthwith plaecd in oharge of an armed furce, and escorted above the point indicated. This courso will be adopted in all cases whether the iitiantity or cotton brought be large or small. Tho Railroad companies have already issued orders iu furtherance of the object of this proclamation, and no violation of theni will be permitted. Signed THOS. O. MOORE, Governor of Louisiaua. 1 shall co-operate with Governor Moore iu the euforcemeul of the above order. Signed D. E. TWIGGS, Maj. Gou. Commanding. Colonel McReady, late editor or ihe Louisville Courier, will take command of a regiment uu-dcr General Buck ner. The Ciliicns' Bank of New Orleans is, circulating five'dollar notes cut in two, each piece to represent two dollars and a half. Thirteen hundred Indian warriors crusned the Arkausas river near Furl tmilh on the 2 ilh ull., eu route for MoCulloch'a army. Goneral Whitfield, late of Kansas, is abo moving towards Southern Missouri, at the head of Texan troops. The Federal Drioouers sent lo New Orleans were escorted to their quarters iu that cily by a colored company. , An exchange of shots and shell look place on tho i!0th ult. between Ihe Federal man-of-war Waterwilch and the Confederate steamer Joy, without damage on eithor side. A boat from the Waterwilch landed some men at the Telegraph Station, at the head of the pasaes, who carried oft' the instruments. The Confederate steamer South Carolina had captured a Mexican Bleanier ofl Galveston. George Davis and W. J. Dorlich were eleoled Senators from North Carolina for the Confederate Conerous. It is reported that 15'000 Confederate troops are between Green River and Nashville, and about a reeinient tier day were arriving at Nashville from Boulhorn points. The Confederates claim lo have 40,000 men in Kentucky. Tho rumor of Ind'capture of New Orleans is revived at Nashville, and the details thereof are said lo have been reoieved there. Tn.mnrrnw nicirniiiu's ioumal will ooutaiu the correspondence between General Anderson and I .. . . . .. -.1:1 t IV. ..lali.D In llalaerman late auiior ui urn ... the suopiolou of the Cow ier .aud h'm exodus into tho Soiithorn Confederacy. Kx-Govornor Helm has taken the oath of allegiance lo tho United Stales, aud returned homo. Green River bridgo is mined aud ready lo be blown up by the Confederates. The peudiug congressional elections engross publio attention throughout the Confederacy, lu live States only electoral tickets for the Presidential eleolion are thus far put up. It is evident from the tone of the Southern papers, that the Rebel army of the Potomac will act strictly un tue ueieuaivr. ir...n.nf Ri MarVa fount V. who was . ,.t- .! I! ll. l.g.annHul cn and la ex 11 r LfTUUHIUtUHal a . - mail just arrived from Baltimore. Ibe I ot-mast.r stated lhat there was a number of letters in the mail from Virginia. 1 he parly arrived here to-night, coming up ho nver i J morning. No signs of Rebels in cauip -r butteries were discovei able at Ma'hiat omt. Oeoeial Fremont will follow him closely and h.i.. he fill II Ull uiui. inn of men I ive mm u.nm w. ----- --- , argea wun biciiu8 s t..u.( r,m . j,niWCBn i.000 and 1,0W renet cav.iry provisions from the socesaiouin 1 ' ' f :"' ,Mn near Lisbon, whose object is pre- Bd to. the Rebe . in V.rgm.a n B, u.. .. . belw ayance ,a pcdition lauuiug w , . . . j ihcn fall Dcg upon ao-"- Pmile- from l'iney Toint, a.,1 1; no r. fro . , " P1. "a lJLtailortUo train going . 1... . eindiivnuso o'. .Ml . limo" .-j--. ap.is.l Inlercallng Items from va.nn.gion. Tribune Dispatch. WA8U1.NOTON. Oct. 8. The report of a large Rebel force, dispatched from the Potomac army westward, is unfounded. Detachments from the Sickles brigade, which have beeu scouriug lower Maryland, report the dominant sentiment as violontly rebellious. Not more than three Union flags were seen. Gen. Scott s order, issued lucsday evening, for tho release of Col. Ulair, is Hot yet carried into ellcd. He is still contmed in the barracks at St. Louis. IJ. W.Cole. Tvpe Founder, formerly ot .Brook lvn. lately of Richmond, lelt me latter cuy two weeks since, uudor Jell'. Davis'' proclama tion order ne oil foreigners, and has arrived hiro. He left 7,000 troops in Riohntond, but only three guns mounted. Three or four hundred negroes were building numerous forts. ... 1 II..I r..ll Mi,, nf . Plnv- be La Mouutuiu's, which safely landed in Ma- .. ';,, 1,100 strong, only SUO answered ryland. It appears that after rising to a ccr- ' b T Mf) no Ur m(ljlg ai tain distance, and (Hiding the ourrent righ , he - BaltilBoro New Vork and .other places cut. the rope aud roso to Iho height of three Throe hundred noauds of iiate typo miles, obtaining a cotuplclo view ot mo rcuo arrived front jhc north and passed as encampments and nioTcmcnls, wliicli imporlnnl ..', plale8 rrom the Mothodist Bdok Con- coiu, from Jno. 11. Lester, a- n Alive of Conncot- uows he has communicated lo tho Wao Depart ment. Illulilv ImiMUtnxl iiom l.c Soiitu Cei. t.ue of titw Uilenna. Lomsvn.i.K, Oct. 8. Rivhuiond ptpors of the lai'nml 1'lmilentoii of tho :)d mat. ure received. .... ,i. r ihn t;ih. tionnrnl I.ea loiucd JauicS river. ... r..,. ..iu i., Inir llirtil in Richmond. r.,mi.rt i iionHnw Hlnlf. F ovd s Joseph h. btrcclcr h force is represented to bo greatly demoralized oiale Judge of the Su ka. . C'HARRA & CHERRIER, MERCHANT TAILORS ' AMD DUUU IN tloclis, Fxauch and Kngll.h t.aalineres SILK8, OBKNADINKbi AND rLCSH TESTINGS. Parlif nlar aliention paid to tbe man' nfaflure of Military Goods. Goods made lo Order and Warranted to Fit. No. 130 South nigh St., eugje-ttm COLUMBTJB, O KOBEBT3 & SA-lvIXJEX, riRAI.kR IN Oralis. Meutrliira, t'lie.nlcal.. IKJUORS fOR MEDICAL FURt'OSES Faint., Oils, Vaialihea, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass, F.rruineiy and Fancy Articles, Artist.' Color, and Bushes, Water Color., faint and Tarnish Brashes, Trusae.:Bapporter.,ac. reprfesci imn Ihe battloof Curnifax Ferrj: and Wises Goucralship ia severely critiziscd by llic Richmond papers. The Enrjuircr savB the relations bolwocu Geu- erals Floyd and Wiso aio painTul enough lo cx-nl..in all niir reverses in Western Virginia. General Wiee. accompanied by Genetal llen- ninrqpii. has arrived iu Richmond". The former vill .vrclmbly be court marlialcd. Gen. Lee takes commaud of Ihe forces tinder him.nlf and Flovd. A statement in the Galveslou Xcw makes lha number of Texan troops now in tho field 20,000, of which 3,000 are in Vireiuia, d,000 iu Western Missouri and Arknuuas, and 1,000 in Arizona and New Mexico. Robert, Scott aunotiucca himself a candidate for tho Confederate Congress for Fai-quar. Dis trict. .. Communication over tho Last leuiiessce ivail- oarl ban been interrupted lot Bomo days in con sequence of the washing away of the track by the Hoods. President Davis lett lor ManasBas on the ,n.l. ..1 oum un. . r . . 2 - There is great rejoicing througnout theUouth hBd to go wuuoui m ", capture of Lexington and the Fremont coBee and sugar were '"'P"-" C3 AH JK. BKMIJDIAL -VC:t:lSJT THIS DELICIOUS TONIO BTIHTLANT, .cnLrlll.l.V DESIUNED Wll TUB. K1 i.iTwwMiec! thfio-cf ' id t-Ua.Jti-.atul " RrhiiHitna Ibe piomlnenl phy.lcisns, ehemlsl. nI0Jr,'r"- .ii r ihnu inlriH.ic medicine qualities (tool ud diuretic) which belongs to an "" V" jf lha ifofiial Proanon and th famlt, bvl" UlU., ' "ATOOl I - I , etc., IS uow e-noieen oy nil v I. 1..M I v .11 rfniv.l.t.. urocele 84 North HiKh.tret. (east aide). few dool.no.thof "'"P " 1U"1 """rZ BINtNtiKR Cf).. ""t. ' I (EsablUhed In 1778.) oie n-oprieiore, aorftwtf I . nrond .trrtt, New Tork, For into by all the principal Druggliaand Grocer. In tVH.aCOTT-BABBER. Wonld aotlfy hi. numerous frlind. and cn.tomer. that h. baa returned, aad will hereafter ba found at his old tand ander Bartllt A Smith'. Bank, High street. He aollclt. a r.turn ot bis old en.tomtr, ot2 flolnmLii.. .i.. i .nd famlllarltvalth the reontre. ment. of Druggists, and our superior jnsiness facilities enable ns to furnish them with cholreLlqnors for medi- aalam lauiiy use. iciit, recently a citnou ot urookiyu. one Bloat, und olher northerners, were engaged iu nlinrinir four huudred uuiBkcts a week, and innniifacturiue sewinir machines. A number of ufernal machines Had- been piaueu on -ine 3 hero is a company uiauulaolur- as been appointed Asso- perior Court of Nebras- Ueiald Dispatch. Doctors Hainialon and Swalm of tho 11th Brooklyn regiment, who were taken prisoners at Bull s Run, arrived here this evening via f'ort Monroe, from Hicbmond. ihey were re leased iu parole aud oame with the 67 wounded prisoners. They give almost nepiorauie account of the condition of our wounded aud tho man ner Ihey have been treated by the reoois. ao- oordiug lo thotr account, our pusoners nave suffered the torments ol ine damned, anci ine wonder is that any ot tbem are now auve. it now appears that the 67 wounded whom Ihey released, were cases the rebel doctors could not cure, and therefore were permitted fo return home. The rebel government nan learueu Bomelhiug regarding the probable expedition uoiilb, aud it produced tho greatest excitement throughout the Gulf and Cotton Slates. It was believed that vast numbers of the troops now in Virginia would be cauea to ine respective States where these attacks were apprehended. There was a great scarcity ot provisions auu also of medicines. Our wounded frequently xea, pro- over the captu iliffiniilt v. J . . . , .! . i l e :il General A. 11. DriBooun uic-u n. otimuiervuie, Ro-ith Tarolina. on Ihe iM ult. A South Carolina Kcgimont naa leu lor Suf folk. Vireiuia. A Iliuhffioim tiespatcu iu miu .naiieston Courier, says that President 1'avls was received at Fairfax uoun Mouse wm. gicm. cimuubi &am. General Van Dorn is assiguea to uuty in the t . 1. n rAl.im.K Mansfield Lovcll, late of New York is appoint- c!ude its passage by the Rebel force. It can od Brieadier General, aud assigned to duly iu now be crossed only by the bridges, all wniv-n m Louis re in possession of our army. . 1 . .. . 1 IliPniin ri.iiif ilia nn I Tna 1riiiilkl rpilftril tt rharcei ft i a in 8 t federaoy at tho inefficiency of the mail arrange- uiout have not yet reached head quarters, and " I ftiA fiftflA rpmninn in ft g til tit QUO, 01 V Potter or the 1st Michigan Regiment died On Saturday last, by orderof CommisBioncr . :. A.. l? " ' oi 6i.. f T.r,knu r,...n l.i.Mi. Cashier U. S. N.. with a dela--h- FeSh VlOieo-n-ersirsaiu ment o? To men, accompanied by two detective f.rbc ood "l"10""' proceeded to W. Marys nver on the Some French naval officers from tho onre for love or money Tho question of a successor to Jen. xtavis. was being agitated throughout the Soulh, and gene-r.l Lcilirf wall that Alex. Stephens would be agreed upon. Tho feeble state of Davis1 health e . i V. . ... In ll.a was used as an .rgumcni sj.iuoi. u.,... .v event, however, of a permanent rcitoralion it is tho intention of the Rebel government to make him a Licuteuaut-Gcneral. The heavy rains of the last 21 hours have swollen the river to sucn an extent as 10 .n ConcUe Jacob Bell, and on Sunday arrested J no. Thom- 1'iom T'niici!e. rennt,,'! Troo),, in th: Coiilr.lemlc ArmyTh'ir UentntliUoiH'tiiHl in fic 't'"- Jolm- ttviis Jlvvniiiih Troops M-viwj S'v th. Fiom Oar Bpwl.l Corn pomU-ut. NABHVU.I.K, Sepl. 21, IWil-The Si ale of Tennessee beinp; next to Virginia, Ihe most populous of tho weeded Wales, its conlribiiiion of Iroops to the Confederate j Arm. liliewiar rank, aecillld iu number. B'lt respectabre as ils contingent is, it comes not by any menus up lo ihe commuu caiiiuatrs vt its strength. Previous lo my departure from Ihe North, a statement, was circulating iu the press that "Tennessee had furnished a quol.t of no less Ihau 115,1100 men. This hgurc is ir auuve Iho mark. Some six weeks ago, a statement, prepared by the Governor in response to a resolution of the Confederate Congress calling lor detailed information as lo Iho number oi troop, raised by the several Stales, appeared in one of Ihe dailies of this city. According to Tennessee had at that lime U1 rcgimenjs ot infantry, 10 oouipauica of cavalry, and b batteries in the field. A list Of Iho companies Composing this force, published at the same time, showed, however, that they averaged only about 70 rank and lilo. Allowing them ic, we have only : .H leKllueul.of flllautiy 110 compaule. ol i ineu each) In companies of t'avahy tt v.mjauies of Artillery t : : woo Making the usual allowance for Iobbcs by sickness, discharge, desertion, etc, it may be safely assumed that the Tennessee forces iu the f'niitmlcralo service do not excoed Uo.OOO iu number.- The Northern estiiuaio of o5,00i was doubtlessly based upou au allowance of 1,000 men for each regiment serving. Tbo principal commanders of tho Tennessee forces are Major-General Pillow aud Brigadier-Generals B. F. Cheatham, Caeswoll, Foster, Anderson, and Zollicoflcr. -Polk is a Major-General in the Confederate sorvice, holdidg a direct appoint pient from Jefferson Davis. Of the former, Pillow and Zollieoffor aanlocedculs are familiar in vnnr Traders. Gen. Casswull ia a politician of some local notoriety, but without military experience. Cheatham, one of the numerous family of the same uamo that have long beeu identified with the history of Nashville aud Middle Teuuesuec, is a gent lemauly blackleg a rockleus gambler aud habitual toper. ' He was first captain and afterward colonel of the 8d Tennessee regimout ia the Moxican war. Bob Foster is bIbo a character -of some prominence iu this vicinity. Ho likewise served in tbe Mexican war. He is neither much respected as a man, nor considered a military genius so much so, that bo has thus far been kept at home n commaud of Ibis militia distriot. Ihereoord of Gen. Sam. R. Anderson, commanding inc Tennessee brigado under Geu. Lee, is still more illuminous. His private character is ot tne worst description. He has been guilty ot many swindling operations; among others, 'one -by which h robbed an orphan boy under his guardianship of his entire inheritance. As a politician, however, he had some standing aud iutlueuce; He was for niauy years the rost-mastur of Ihia city, relinquishing the office only laBt March. On the whole, tho TcucBsee Generals are far below the average of Southern comtuaaiucrs and will hardly shed any great luiiter on Iheir native State. . - - Efforts are slill making throughout iho Plato to swell its quota by reoruttiog. ine papers are filled with advertisements of embryo company and regimental organizations. But from the constant and desperate exhortations to en list in the local press it appears mat eitner tuo martial ,ardcr has considerably cooled off or lhat tho fighting material is nearly exhausted. In this city naraiy anyiuiuR 01 sniu uo"' i life is perceptible, como uoiuo uuaru couirm- j ules had irregular drills; this is about all. The truth is, that, deduoting the nearly 60,000 Union votes polled at tho last eleotion, there aro only about 120,000 rualos between tho ages of 18 and 00 in the Stale, nearly one-fourth of whom are already enlisted a" percentage that includes pretty inuoh all disposed and able lo fight. , ,, , . , Governor, or rather "King Harris," has just followed in the wake of Johnson, aud proclaimed the nocessity of an additional levy of 30,000 men in his Stato. Uis Majesty may be, like the General-in-Chief, fully couviuced of the necessity of this number, but I greatly doubt that he has confidence in.his ability to hum and organ ize this additional, army in uis aommionu. n. rabble of a few thousand raw militiamen wil. probably be huddled together, to scatter like chaff before the wind when brought face to face with the Federal forces. 1 only trust that the "king" will place himself at the head of his gallant subieclB, just summoned to rcpol the threatened Yankee invasion, and lead them in person tobattle. While sojourning in Louisville, I was ollen disgusted by the pusillanimity shown by Union men, when dwelling upou the possibility of au invasion of their Slate by Confederate forces. Their ability .to tUrcnd themselves was never thought of, but oowardly speculations as to the strength and povorly of the rebels indulged in. 1 can uow give tho assurance lo my Louisville friends, lhat they are not the only ones living i .v..,- .n,l irombliue. Tho friclil on this side is just as great as on their own. The people of Nashvillo are just as apprehensive ot the ap-poarancc of ruthless Lincoln minions before iheir city as llio citizens of Louisville aro of a j..i,.i; nf iheii-a bv savane rcbols. The pa- c tl, lit. feanlinnnnpl I n ( hllV pcrs bore are nueu mm readers to rise en masse, and prepare to meet i the "hordes of Abolitionists now pouring into Kentucky from the North for the subjugation of their Slate;" and the burden of the street talk is the "impending invasion." About five hundred troops havo passed through here for Bowling Groen since my last, whence 1 was unable to learn. The general opinion is, that some regiments arc on tho way fir tho same destination from Eastern Virginia, t ininli however, that tho call of Gov. Harris for thirty lliouBand additional men, in response lo a requisition irom uov. ouiiubiuu, in guuu idenco that the General's appeal for help at Richmond has been fruitlcBS, aud that nothing .n i. snared from the army of the Potomac There is another tremendous scare along the coast. Late dispatches from New Orleans convey a rumor of the occupation of Mississippi riivhvB, naval foroo of Federalists, aud de scribe the excitement produced by the news as defying description. No definite intelligence T . " t . 1 a.I alia. t T fo,l A(.a 1 An had, however, oecn rc-coi., v,.... authorities refusing to commuuicate what they know refusal which looks rather omiuous. OUl. . ... . .!.... u Col. Coffee, of.BooneTilie, pawo---here for St. Louis? but it has been -w-rtuM lhat he ison his way South with important d - u-neiiis containing an omciai eeedingsof the mocV Legislature held at Lx.-iug'on recently. ' . A scout from Linn Creek report! the probable death of the notorious rebel leader, the Rev. Meekel Johnson, who, while moving some or Dupont & IV's powder on Friday last, wa fJen- smmubIv wounded by lb .('won oi ouo b .. . l ,..u ;ll ..rnk.ltltf la.?. lien, r remoni anu emu wm for Scdli lo morrow. A special dispatch lo the St. Louis Rubhwn s J it aeems to bo the belief in mililtry ctro te bare that General Price will avor . m.w ilh General Freinont, if pi-iibiuie, " ' cuterlaiu Ihe opiuinn that ne liwi 7 siirprise upon some poiat I fie' least and lhat we enan nave - -, ,-lieu. Fremont designs lo follow Hie R.-bc "'my into Arkausis and force tnem 10 ngm w..vU.-er he caa eiioounlor Ibcm. .,'., ,.,. , The Paymasters who brought $1,200,000 to pay off llio troops to Ibe aist ol August, have discharged their duty and returned to Bl. Louis. ' ,,.i', Claib Jackson is reported en route lo lexaJ. The farmers of Pettis County recently oftered lo luruisu uonerai rremoui, b'1"i 000 worth of grain. rnnlain Chamniou. the rebel who was last week, has bcon arrested as a spy iu Georgetown, and is now a prisoner. ' w-ilh $'-'50, heie (RON NOItTII CAROLINA. Kiicsuii'iii'Kt nf lite-Jolt. Imll.ntinl-neiK-loyally .r I lie Nurtls t.tolliilu Renal 'Irooi'. act liom Vliglnl" 1 Drretxl III. Ui.Bai-How Ilia I'nli... Men are Drsgenneil- Force, nl fnrt Wen lloiv Dala Feel about tl.e Lo.a ol ll.t-ter.s.(Coii.'spniKleiice of Ihe N. Y. Tribune. Camp Wool, Hatteras Inu.t, 1 North Carolina, Sept. 1861. The 201h Indiana regiment arrived here yesterday from Fortress Mouroe. They are lo encamp at Chicamacomico, a joint 4 miles fiom here, situated at the olher end of the island. Two mon escajied from Beaufort aud came all the way to this point in a small sail boat, arriving here yesterday moruing. They wete . chased all one day by men in two boats, but still Ihoy escaped. Ihey represent a desperate stale ot things at Beaufort. The families have all abandoned llioir Bomes, anuine soiuma wun are there live iu constant expectation of a tight wilh us. Since these forts were takeu, troops, have been forwarded from Virginia to Beaufort, Newburn, and other points. When tho news came that Fort Hatteras waa taken by tbo United States, a serious turn was given to tho popular mind, and some were in favor of having the State, by its Legislature, resolve itself back into the Union. Hereupon , sides wore taken and blows were struck. lbs Secessionists had all the arms, ana mey or course had tbo upper hand. Ono man declared "He was a Union man, aud not ashamed to confess it." At this expression he was taken inM a shop, his nose put into a vice, aud sciewcd nearly out of bis bend; and (ho lips which uttered tbo sentiment were treated in the same way, and both marly pulled out of thrir face. A lady just from Wnshtuton, N. C, tells me that about the same lime a company of men were assembled in a store and extolling the Secession Hag, when au old Revolutionary soldier (the only ouo kuowu lo be, living iu North Carolina) interfered, and asked" the Secessionists if they knew how much the old Stars aud Stripes cosl? He said he did, for ho fought under them, and saw them when first raised, aud that he would never recognize another. At this ho was taken, his head half shaved, a plaster put on, aud the plaster covered with tar, and the tar with feathers, and then ho was hurled into the street! Who would think lhat n soldier of Washington would ever bo subjected lo such treatment iu the laud where Washington himself was once almost worshipped ns if ho woro a god? How long will Americans allow such things to be? Those ro but samples of v series of barba rous acts, Winch to'-WCUUOU inctu scparatciy would fill a dozen rages, and only make oue's blood curdlo in his veins lo lliink of them. ; There aro five humtTod men iu Fort Macon, and about a hundred guns mounted. The bombproof Is covered with railroad iron, and Ihe center of the fort is filled with water, intended to pro? ent bombs from bursting. There are three thousand men about four miles from Beau-fort, and a thousand mon havo been sent iuto this (Hyde) county; so lhat as soon as wo enter the main land we may expect eome hot work. These men inform us that whon the news came into North Carolina- that wo had taken these forts, Jeff. Davis, when ho heard it, telegraphed back that iho forts should be relokcu if it cost him tho lives of ten thousand men. ByHie way, it will not. be amiss perhaps, to inform Jeff, that be must make calculations lo lose quite that number and cyen more, should' ho ever try to recapture this point. No doubt it is a serious drawback to the Confederacy to i.nvo this inlet for prizes under Undo Sam's care; for it was through this inlet that most of the Northern vessels woro taken by Jcfl s pri- We had a great gale here yestorday. The oscan cast itself upou Iho beach with almost the noise of seven thunders. The land -was partly overflowed, and some of the tents wore carried about by the winds. As the breakers hurled themselves upon the beach, ihey carried with them hundreds of line fish, which lay upon the beach lo tho intense gratification of our Zouaves, who wero waiting to bo relieved from "salt junk." .Two different congregations have, at two different times, invited Mr.. Conway, Chaplain of Hawkins' Zouaves, to preach lor them, which he has douo. He finds ihe people up tbe country some sixteen miles as favorable to our oausc auu as siuuetcgr uu .uv down hero. Tho health ot our troops is goon, notwithstanding the bad waicr wo unua auu the oxposurc which we are sutyeuie-.i . . and ague. Colonel Hawkins is aniiuus to be ordered, with sutlicieul force, over into the main laud, where we may share ine giory . from North lo Soulh Carolina a plHCO where our boys arc going to do a iniug or two. POSTSCRIPT. H tTTKTlAS, N. G, Sept. J'J, lfilil. To Vte Editori of the X. Y. Tribune: Sia: As Iho pooplo hero have beeu unable to raise any provisions on those Band banks, they have usually provided themselves with them from the msiu land across the sound, a distance of some 45 miles, and as that means of procuring any means of subsistence is now out off by their declaring their allegiauce to the tinin,. the of necessity are ou the verge of ercat suffering,. and already it has commenced for I to-day saw a wholo family destitute of shoes, aud wun no provision, w . lies and a small amount of corn. 1 Ins slate of " i . ...,.. I .a. 1 Iitr Aiit i unit art if nr. thiugs can ouiy uc rem'..-., -v -i j cualion of a point on llic main land. irie Ittlrealiiig"lo AlkiHiNHs Fremont in pursuit A Itelirl Lender llloun Up. JtrrLR80N City, Oct 6. X anacial despatch to the St. Louis Democrat - - i a.tl Little doubt is entertained here lhat General Price is on his way South with the main body hi. force. Hie force reported to be making demonstrations near Georgetown and Scdalia, m.r.lv a detachment for the purpose of keep- ;r nr advance euard eneaeed. When latt heard from General Price's advance'guard was at Clinton, Henry county. It is supposed that Prioe will pushtorwara to me ArauB tiuv Kit CARSoN.-li.il Carson is iu command of the First Ucgimeui oi ontucrio a. Union, New Mcnco, auu mucu bkmbi.ui.uu . felt at the general appearance and efhoieuoy ot his command. ""Six Fk'tT SfcVKH IXCHKS 01 VOM'M ftaRU. A recruit named Carter, in the Indiana Eleventh, is six foet seven inches in height, and weighs two hundred and forty pounds. While lying fiat on his back on the ground, lie dehes four ordinary well muscled men to prevent him from using to his fec. He is one of tho most powe: ful men, imiscularly, ever seen.